Hassanakis is a young Muslim boy of Turkish descent growing up on Crete
during WWI.
Fifteen generations of his family have lived on the island and until now
he has never had any reason not to think he is a Cretan. But with the
Great Powers tussling over the collapsing Ottoman Empire and the
island's Christians in rebellion, an outbreak of ethnic violence forces
his family to flee to the Cretan City of Chania.
He begins to lay down roots and his snappy dress earns him the nickname
of Hassan 'the mirror'. As WWI draws to a close and the Turkish War of
Independence rages, he begins a heady romance with the elegant Hüsniye.
There are rumors that the Cretan Muslims will be sent to Turkey but
Hassanakis can't believe he will be sent to a country whose language he
barely knows and where he knows no-one.
This powerful novel drawn from the diary of a refugee family evokes the
beauty, complexity and trauma of Crete's past and weaves it into a
moving tale of an ordinary man living through extraordinary times.